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We have been meeting together every 6 months since the fall of 2005. The Internet Identity Workshop is the work group of Identity Commons an industry consortia & community linking many efforts focused on a people centric identity layer of the net. The Workshop provides open forum for both the big guys and the small fry to come together in a safe and balanced space. It is not about any one technology - rather it is a place to discuss multiple interoperating (and possible competing) projects, standards, and networks for identity, data sharing, and reputation. IIW is Co-Produced by Phil Windley (@windley),Kaliya Hamlin (@identitywoman) & Doc Searls (dsearls) IIWX is being co-facilitated by Kaliya Hamlin and Heidi Nobantu Saul (@nobantu). The Notes Collection Center is being run by Kas Neteler (@kasneteler) and Heidi Nobantu Saul.Monday, December 6, 2010

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CONTEXT For Shared Vision IDENTITY GANG! formed in 2004Monday, December 6, 2010

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CONTEXT For Shared Vision Early on the Identity Gang list was a critical forum for community collaboration it is still active here & many of the protocol efforts & foundations that have emerged have their own lists. http://lists.idcommons.net/lists/info/communityMonday, December 6, 2010

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CONTEXT For Shared Vision The Identity Gang was probably one of the ﬁrst technical communities to have a very active community blog life that complemented our mailing list conversations. Doc Searls played a critical role in getting almost all community members to blog in the early days of the community 2004-2005. There are several aggregated blogs you can go to get a sense of activity in the community. The Classic - www.planetidentity.org/ A newer one under development - http://seriouslyidentity.com/Monday, December 6, 2010

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CONTEXT For Shared Vision s Wiki forums were critical for sharing ideas and common language like the LexiconMonday, December 6, 2010

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CONTEXT For Shared Vision Real Time Web Tools SEARCH These are newer mediums for collaboration and information sharing using #hashtags etc. to connect work.Monday, December 6, 2010

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SHARED UNDERSTANDING using shared language A Bill of Rights for Users of the Social Web September 4, 2007 Authored by Joseph Smarr, Marc Canter, Robert Scoble, and Michael Arrington Preamble: There are already many who support the ideas laid out in this Bill of Rights, but we are actively seeking to grow the roster of those publicly backing the principles and approaches it outlines. That said, this Bill of Rights is not a document “carved in stone” (or written on paper). It is a blog post, and it is intended to spur conversation and debate, which will naturally lead to tweaks of the language. So, let’s get the dialogue going and get as many of the major stakeholders on board as we can! A Bill of Rights for Users of the Social Web We publicly assert that all users of the social web are entitled to certain fundamental rights, specifically: • Ownership of their own personal information, including: ◦ their own profile data ◦ the list of people they are connected to ◦ the activity stream of content they create; • Control of whether and how such personal information is shared with others; and • Freedom to grant persistent access to their personal information to trusted external sites. Sites supporting these rights shall: • Allow their users to syndicate their own profile data, their friends list, and the data that’s shared with them via the service, using a persistent URL or API token and open data formats; • Allow their users to syndicate their own stream of activity outside the site; • Allow their users to link from their profile pages to external identifiers in a public way; and • Allow their users to discover who else they know is also on their site, using the same external identifiers made available for lookup within the service.Monday, December 6, 2010

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SHARED UNDERSTANDING using shared language OECD Paper Properties of Identity At a Crossroads: "Personhood" and the Digital Identity in the Information Society http://bit.ly/OECDdigitalpersonnoodMonday, December 6, 2010

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SHARED UNDERSTANDING using shared language Properties of Identity 1.Identity is social. 6.Identity is consequential. 2.Identity is subjective. 7.Identity is dynamic. 3.Identity is valuable. 8.Identity is contextual. 4.Identity is referential. 9.Identity is equivocal. 5.Identity is composite. OECD Paper At a Crossroads: "Personhood" and the Digital Identity in the Information Society The Properties of Identity were articulated by Bob Blakley, Jeff Broberg, Anthony Nadalin, Dale Olds, Mary Ruddy, Mary Rundle, and Paul Trevithick.Monday, December 6, 2010

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SHARED UNDERSTANDING Identiﬁers Claims Single String Pairs A claim is by one party about Identiﬁers link things together another or itself. and enable correlation. It does not have to be linked to They can be endpoints on the an identiﬁer. internet. Proving you are over 18 for example and not giving your real name.Monday, December 6, 2010

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Freedom of Expression personal and politicalMonday, December 6, 2010

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Freedom of Action Teachers being able to drink Young people free to socially when in own time. explore themselves BLIZARD WoW in game ID vs “RealID” change this comes from not having all contexts linked togetherMonday, December 6, 2010

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Freedom of Movement and Assembly Freedom to group and cluster outside commercial silos & business contexts.Monday, December 6, 2010

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Freedom to Peer-to-Peer Link Freedom to determine how the link is seen by othersMonday, December 6, 2010

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What is the context for people gathering? “We’re trying to build a social layer for everything.” - Mark ZuckerburgMonday, December 6, 2010

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Users take actions on your site Users come to your site to consume your unique content. They take Connect actions like commenting, reviewing, making purchases, rating, and more. Users share with friends, who discover your site With Facebook Connect, users can easily share your content and their actions with their friends on Facebook. As these friends discover your content, they click back to your site, engaging with your content and completing the viral loop. Social features increase engagement Creating deeper, more social integrations keeps users engaged with your site longer, and more likely to take actions they share with their friends. (For example — dont just show users whats most popular on your site, but whats most popular with their friends on your site.)Monday, December 6, 2010

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Proposal for OpenID Connect The response is a JSON object which contains some (or all) of the following reserved keys: • user_id - e.g. "https://graph.facebook.com/24400320" • asserted_user - true if the access token presented was issued by this user, false if it is for a different user • profile_urls - an array of URLs that belong to the user • display_name - e.g. "David Recordon" • given_name - e.g. "David" • family_name - e.g. "Recordon" • email - e.g. "recordond@gmail.com" • picture - e.g. "http://graph.facebook.com/davidrecordon/picture" The server is free to add additional data to this response (such as Portable Contacts) so long as they do not change the reserved OpenID Connect keys.Monday, December 6, 2010

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Managed Cards Come in two Flavors “Phones Home” Doesn’t “Phone Home” Government Employee issued ID Issued age veriﬁcation the employer sees where used just like a drivers license in the real worldMonday, December 6, 2010

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Information Cards have a ton of issues: • Relying Party Adoption • why shift to claims from identiﬁers • Where are the libraries and tools for Relying parties • Client Download Required • New User Experience • What are Active Clients and How do they work • Risk & Liability Models are Unclear • If a claim is validated and it is untrue who is liableMonday, December 6, 2010

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OStatus isnt a new protocol; it applies some great protocols in a natural and reasonable way to make distributed social networking possible. • Activity Streams encode social events in standard Atom or RSS feeds. • PubSubHubbub pushes those feeds in realtime to subscribers across the Web. • Salmon notifies people of responses to their status updates. • Webfinger makes it easy to find people across social sites.Monday, December 6, 2010

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Open Identity For Open Government Fast Company blog post by Kaliya Government Experimenting with http://bit.ly/FastCo-IDGov Identity Technologies Government Services Administration website on ID http://bit.ly/ID-Gov-OpenMonday, December 6, 2010

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There will be a Big Bang With all new technologies there is a point at which new things start happening that the creators of the technology did not envision this is a big bang in identity.Monday, December 6, 2010

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Mission statements: • Identity Commons: Support, facilitate, and promote the creation of an open identity layer for the Internet, one that maximizes control, convenience, and privacy for the individual while encouraging the development of healthy, interoperable communities. • Information Card Foundation: Promote, protect, and enable the development of an open, trusted, interoperable, royalty-free identity layer for the Internet that maximizes control over personal information by individuals • OpenID Foundation: To foster and promote the development of, public access to, and adoption of OpenID as a framework for user-centric identity on the Internet; and To acquire, create, hold, and manage intellectual property related to OpenID and provide equal access to such intellectual property to the OpenID community and public at no charge. • Kantara Intiative: Foster identity community harmonization, interoperability, innovation, and broad adoption through the development of open identity specifications, operational frameworks, education programs, deployment and usage best practices for privacy- respecting, secure access to online services • Open Identity Exchange: Collecting aggregating, and distributing information regarding the identity-related services industry to businesses and other stakeholders in that industry in order to improve conditions in that industry by fostering innovation, market transparency, and identity-related product and service interoperability; Providing a neutral, open market registration system for participants in the identity-related services industry; • Data Portability Project: Data portability enables a borderless experience, where people can move easily between network services, reusing data they provide while controlling their privacy and respecting the privacy of others. Our Mission is to help people to use and protect the data they create on networked services, and to advocate for compliance with the values of DataPortability.Monday, December 6, 2010